--- In [email protected], "Patrick Gillam" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- curtisdeltablues wrote:
> >
> > I agree with your point that blending crazy
> > beliefs and explosives takes the whole discussion out of the
> > theoretical and into the world of "holy shit! 
> > 
> > --- Dave" <bikemaster@> wrote:
> > >
> > > with people strapping on bombs and blowing 
> > > themselves up in coffee houses because they believe that 70 
virgins 
> > > will greet them in paradise, it hits a lot closer to home.
> 
> A short time before 9/11/2001, I read or heard 
> somewhere that terrorism arises from a deep sense 
> of hopelessness and powerlessness. But I'm surprised 
> that with all my reading, I haven't run across any kind 
> of compelling discourse as to why terrorists kill civilians 
> and themselves. Has anybody run across a cogent 
> essay somewhere that has some insight into terrorism? 
> Or do you have some insights yourself? Anyone. Thanks.
>

Hi,
I find the following article to be interesting and thorough (if 
that's at all possible):

What Makes a Terrorist?
James Q. Wilson  

Until the nineteenth century, religion was usually the only 
acceptable justification of terror. It is not hard to understand 
why: religion gives its true believers an account of the good life 
and a way of recognizing evil; if you believe that evil in the form 
of wrong beliefs and mistaken customs weakens or corrupts a life 
ordained by God, you are under a profound obligation to combat that 
evil. If you enjoy the companionship of like-minded believers, 
combating that evil can require that you commit violent, even 
suicidal, acts.

The Thuggees of India during their several centuries of existence 
may have killed by slow strangulation 1 million people as sacrifices 
to the Hindu goddess Kali. The Thugs had no political objective and, 
when caught, looked forward to their execution as a quick route to 
paradise.

In the Muslim world, one kind of terrorism, assassination, has 
existed since shortly after the death of the prophet Muhammad. Of 
his early successors, three were killed with daggers. The very 
word "assassin" comes from a group founded by Hasan Ibn al-Sabbah, 
whose devotees, starting in the eleventh century, spread terror 
throughout the Muslim world until they were virtually exterminated 
two centuries later. They killed rival Sunni Muslims, probably in 
large numbers. Perhaps one-third of all Muslim caliphs have been 
killed.

The Assassins were perhaps the world's first terrorists in two 
senses. They did not seek simply to change rulers through murder but 
to replace a social system by changing an allegedly corrupt Sunni 
regime into a supposedly ideal Shiite one. Moreover, the Assassins 
attacked using only daggers, in ways that made their capture and 
execution, often after gruesome torture, inevitable. Murder was an 
act of piety, and as Bernard Lewis has suggested, surviving such a 
mission was often viewed as shameful.

In modern times, killers have taken the lives of the presidents of 
Syria and of Sri Lanka; two prime ministers each of Iran and India; 
the presidents of Aden, Afghanistan, and South Yemen; the president-
elect of Lebanon and the president of Egypt; and countless judges 
and political leaders.

But religiously oriented violence has by no means been confined to 
Islam. In the United States, abortion clinics have been bombed and 
their doctors shot because, to the perpetrators, the Christian Bible 
commands it. Jim Jones killed or required the suicide of his own 
followers at his camp in Guyana, and David Koresh did nothing to 
prevent the mass death of his followers at Waco. As Blaise Pascal 
put it, "men never do evil so openly and contentedly as when they do 
it from religious conviction." Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at 
the RAND Corporation, found that suicide attacks kill four times as 
many people per incident as do other forms of terrorism; since 
September 2000, they have taken about 750 lives—not including the 
3,000 who died from the 9/11 suicide attacks. Of course, most 
religious people have nothing to do with terror, and in the past 
many important instances of suicide attacks, such as the Kamikaze 
aircraft sent by the Japanese against American warships, had no 
religious impulse. Terrorists among the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka 
were not driven by religion. Today, however, religious belief, and 
especially a certain interpretation of the Muslim religion, has come 
to dominate the motives of suicide terrorists, even when religious 
aspirations do not govern the organizations that recruit them. Some 
Middle Eastern terrorist groups, such as Fatah, are secular, and 
some people join even fundamentalist terrorist organizations for non-
religious reasons.

Terrorism, however motivated, baffles people, because they cannot 
imagine doing these things themselves. This bafflement often leads 
us to assume that terrorists are either mentally deranged or 
products of a hostile environment.

In a powerful essay, Cynthia Ozick describes "the barbarous 
Palestinian societal invention": recruiting children to blow 
themselves up. She argues that these are acts of "anti-instinct," 
because they are contrary to the drive to live, the product of a 
grotesque cultural ideal. She is correct to say that this 
recruitment is not psychopathological, but not quite right to say 
that it defies instinct. It defies some instincts but is in accord 
with others.

To explain why people join these different groups, let me make some 
distinctions. One, suggested by Professor Jerrold Post at George 
Washington University, is between anarchic ideologues and 
nationalists.

Anarchist or ideological groups include the Red Army Faction in 
Germany (popularly known as the Baader-Meinhof gang), the Red 
Brigades in Italy, and the Weathermen in America. The German 
government carried out a massive inquiry into the Red Army Faction 
and some right-wing terrorist groups in the early 1980s. (Since it 
was done in Germany, you will not be surprised to learn that it was 
published in four volumes.) The Red Army members were middle-class 
people, who came, in about 25 percent of the cases, from broken 
families. Over three-fourths said they had severe conflicts with 
their parents. About one-third had been convicted in juvenile court. 
They wanted to denounce "the establishment" and bourgeois society 
generally, and joined peer groups that led them steadily into more 
radical actions that in time took over their lives. Italians in the 
Red Brigades had comparable backgrounds.

Ideological terrorists offer up no clear view of the world they are 
trying to create. They speak vaguely about bringing people into some 
new relationship with one another but never tell us what that 
relationship might be. Their goal is destruction, not creation. To 
the extent they are Marxists, this vagueness is hardly surprising, 
since Marx himself never described the world he hoped to create, 
except with a few glittering but empty generalities.

A further distinction: in Germany, left-wing terrorists, such as the 
Red Army Faction, were much better educated, had a larger fraction 
of women as members, and were better organized than were right-wing 
terrorists. Similar differences have existed in the United States 
between, say, the Weather Underground and the Aryan Nation. Left-
wing terrorists often have a well-rehearsed ideology; right-wing 
ones are more likely to be pathological.

I am not entirely certain why this difference should exist. One 
possibility is that right-wing terrorist organizations are looking 
backward at a world they think has been lost, whereas left-wing ones 
are looking ahead at a world they hope will arrive. Higher education 
is useful to those who wish to imagine a future but of little value 
to those who think they know the past. Leftists get from books and 
professors a glimpse of the future, and they struggle to create it. 
Right-wingers base their discontent on a sense of the past, and they 
work to restore it. To join the Ku Klux Klan or the Aryan Nation, it 
is only necessary that members suppose that it is good to oppress 
blacks or Catholics or Jews; to join the Weather Underground, 
somebody had to teach recruits that bourgeois society is decadent 
and oppressive.

By contrast, nationalistic and religious terrorists are a very 
different matter. The fragmentary research that has been done on 
them makes clear that they are rarely in conflict with their 
parents; on the contrary, they seek to carry out in extreme ways 
ideas learned at home. Moreover, they usually have a very good idea 
of the kind of world they wish to create: it is the world given to 
them by their religious or nationalistic leaders. These leaders, of 
course, may completely misrepresent the doctrines they espouse, but 
the misrepresentation acquires a commanding power.

Marc Sageman at the University of Pennsylvania has analyzed what we 
know so far about members of al-Qaida. Unlike ideological 
terrorists, they felt close to their families and described them as 
intact and caring. They rarely had criminal records; indeed, most 
were devout Muslims. The great majority were married; many had 
children. None had any obvious signs of mental disorder. The appeal 
of al-Qaida was that the group provided a social community that 
helped them define and resist the decadent values of the West. The 
appeal of that community seems to have been especially strong to the 
men who had been sent abroad to study and found themselves alone and 
underemployed.

A preeminent nationalistic terrorist, Sabri al-Bana (otherwise known 
as Abu Nidal), was born to a wealthy father in Jaffa, and through 
his organization, the Fatah Revolutionary Council, also known as the 
Abu Nidal Organization, sought to destroy Israel and to attack 
Palestinian leaders who showed any inclination to engage in 
diplomacy. He was hardly a member of the wretched poor.

Alan B. Krueger and Jitka Maleckova have come to similar conclusions 
from their analysis of what we know about deceased soldiers in 
Hezbollah, the Iran-sponsored Shiite fighting group in Lebanon. 
Compared with the Lebanese population generally, the Hezbollah 
soldiers were relatively well-to-do and well-educated young males. 
Neither poor nor uneducated, they were much like Israeli Jews who 
were members of the "bloc of the faithful" group that tried to blow 
up the Dome of the Rock mosque in Jerusalem: well paid, well 
educated, and of course deeply religious.

In Singapore a major terrorist organization is Jemaah Islamiyah. 
Singaporean psychologists studied 31 of its members and found them 
normal in most respects. All were male, had average to above-average 
intelligence, and held jobs ranging from taxi driver to engineer. As 
with al-Qaida and Hezbollah members, they did not come from unstable 
families, nor did they display any peculiar desire toward suicidal 
behavior. Though graduates of secular schools, they attached great 
importance to religion.

Of late, women have been recruited for terrorist acts—a remarkable 
development in the Islamic world, where custom keeps women in 
subordinate roles. Precisely because of their traditional attire, 
female suicide bombers can easily hide their identities and disguise 
themselves as Israelis by wearing tight, Western clothing. Security 
sources in Israel have suggested that some of these women became 
suicide bombers to expunge some personal dishonor. Death in a holy 
cause could wash away the shame of divorce, infertility, or 
promiscuity. According to some accounts, a few women have 
deliberately been seduced and then emotionally blackmailed into 
becoming bombers.

That terrorists themselves are reasonably well-off does not by 
itself disprove the argument that terrorism springs from poverty and 
ignorance. Terrorists might simply be a self-selected elite, who 
hope to serve the needs of an impoverished and despondent populace—
in which case, providing money and education to the masses would be 
the best way to prevent terrorism.

>From what we know now, this theory appears to be false. Krueger and 
Maleckova compared terrorist incidents in the Middle East with 
changes in the gross domestic product of the region and found that 
the number of such incidents per year increased as economic 
conditions improved. On the eve of the intifada that began in 2000, 
the unemployment rate among Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza 
Strip was falling, and the Palestinians thought that economic 
conditions were improving. The same economic conditions existed at 
the time of the 1988 intifada. Terror did not spread as the economy 
got worse but as it got better.

This study agrees with the view of Franklin L. Ford, whose book 
Political Murder covers terrorist acts from ancient times down to 
the 1980s. Assassinations, he finds, were least common in fifth-
century Athens, during the Roman republic, and in eighteenth-century 
Europe—periods in which "a certain quality of balance, as between 
authority and forbearance" was reinforced by a commitment 
to "customary rights." Terrorism has not corresponded to high levels 
of repression or social injustice or high rates of ordinary crime. 
It seems to occur, Ford suggests, in periods of partial reform, 
popular excitement, high expectations, and impatient demands for 
still more rapid change.

But if terrorists—suicide bombers and other murderers of innocent 
people—are not desperate, perhaps they are psychologically 
disturbed. But I cannot think of a single major scholar who has 
studied this matter who has found any psychosis. Terrorists are 
likely to be different from non-terrorists, but not because of any 
obvious disease.

In short, recruiting religiously inspired or nationalistically 
oriented terrorists seems to have little to do with personal 
psychosis, material deprivation, or family rejection. It may not 
even have much to do with well-known, high-status leaders. Among 
West Bank and Gaza Palestinians, for example, there is broad support 
for suicide bombings and a widespread belief that violence has 
helped the Palestinian cause, even though as late as June 2003 only 
about one-third of all Palestinians thought Yasser Arafat was doing 
a good job. Indeed, his popularity has declined since the intifada 
began.

The key to terrorist recruitment, obviously, is the group that does 
the recruitment. Jerrold Post interviewed for eight hours an Abu 
Nidal terrorist named Omar Rezaq, who skyjacked an airliner and 
killed five passengers, two of them women, before an Egyptian rescue 
team captured him. The interviews sought to test the defense 
counsel's claim that Rezaq suffered from post-traumatic stress 
disorder and so did not appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions. 
Post found no such disease.

He met instead a thoroughly calm, professional man, who, after a 
happy childhood devoid of poverty, had moved with his mother to a 
refugee camp following the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. At school he 
encountered a radical Palestinian teacher (and PLO member) who 
imbued him with a hatred of Israel and helped him join a camp where, 
at age 12, he began receiving military training. From there he went 
to a technical school sponsored by the United Nations. After being 
drafted into the Jordanian army, Rezaq deserted and joined Fatah, 
where he learned about Zionism and got more military training. He 
was sent on military missions against Israel, but periods of 
inactivity made him discontented. In time, searching for a stronger 
commitment, he joined Abu Nidal.

Abu Nidal ordered him to seize an airliner and hold it until Egypt 
released certain activists from prison. After the plane he seized 
landed in Malta, Rezaq began executing passengers, beginning with 
two Israelis (they were the enemy) and three Americans (they 
supported the enemy). Before he could kill more, a rescue team 
stormed the plane and captured him.

Rezaq spoke to Professor Post in a calm, orderly, unemotional way. 
He thought of himself as a soldier and of the people he shot as 
enemies. He realized that his actions were crimes—that was why he 
wore a ski mask—but he did not think they were wrong: he was, after 
all, fighting Zionism. The notion that he was mentally ill was 
absurd: Abu Nidal, a highly professional group, would have long 
since weeded him out. Abu Nidal had killed or injured many people in 
massacres at the Rome and Vienna airports and gravely wounded the 
Israeli ambassador to Great Britain: you do not accomplish these 
things by relying on psychotics.

While some suicide bombers have been the victims of blackmail, and 
some have been led to believe, wrongly, that the bombs in their 
trucks would go off after they had left them, my sense is that most 
recruitment today relies on small-group pressure and authoritative 
leaders. Anyone who took social-science courses in college will 
surely remember the famous experiments by Stanley Milgram. In the 
1960s, Milgram, then a professor at Yale, recruited ordinary people 
through a newspaper ad offering them money to help in a project 
purporting to improve human memory. The improvement was to come from 
punishing a man who seemed unable to remember words read aloud to 
him. The man, a confederate of Milgram's, was strapped in a chair 
with an electrode attached to his wrist. The punishment took the 
form of electric shocks administered by the experimental subjects 
from a control panel, showing a scale of shocks, from 15 to 450 
volts. At the high end of the scale, clearly marked labels 
warned: "Danger—Severe Shock." As the subject increased the 
imaginary voltage, the man who was supposed to have his memory 
improved screamed in pretended pain.

About two-thirds of the subjects Milgram had recruited went all the 
way to 450 volts. Only two things made a difference: the absence of 
a clear authority figure and the presence of rebellious peers. 
Without these modifications, almost everybody decided to "follow 
orders." This study suggests to me that, rightly managed, a cohesive 
group with an authoritative leader can find people who will do 
almost anything.

Terrorist cells, whether they have heard of Stanley Milgram's 
Obedience to Authority or not, understand these rules. They expose 
members to unchallenged authority figures and quickly weed out 
anyone who might be rebellious. They get rid of doubts by getting 
rid of the doubters.

This is not very different from how the military maintains morale 
under desperate conditions. Soldiers fight because their buddies 
fight. Heroism usually derives not from some deep heroic "urge" or 
from thoughts of Mom, apple pie, and national ideology, but from the 
example of others who are fighting.

Milgram did not train terrorists; he showed that one instinct 
Cynthia Ozick neglected—the instinct to be part of a team—can be as 
powerful as the one that tells us to be decent to other people. But 
suppose Milgram had been the leader of a terrorist sect and had 
recruited his obedient followers into his group; suppose teachings 
in the schools and mass propaganda supported his group. There is 
almost no limit to what he could have accomplished using such 
people. They might not have been clinically ill, but they would have 
been incorporated into a psychopathological movement.

The central fact about terrorists is not that they are deranged, but 
that they are not alone. Among Palestinians, they are recruited by 
Hamas, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and the al-Aqsa Martyrs 
Brigade, among others. In Singapore, their recruitment begins with 
attendance at religious schools. If ardent and compliant, they are 
drawn into Jemaah Islamiyah, where they associate with others like 
themselves. Being in the group gives each member a sense of special 
esteem and exclusivity, reinforced by the use of secrecy, code 
names, and specialized training. Then they are offered the chance to 
be martyrs if they die in a jihad. Everywhere, leaders strengthen 
the bombers' commitment by isolating them in safe houses and by 
asking them to draft last testaments and make videotapes for their 
families, in which they say farewell.

Given its long history, one must wonder whether terrorism 
accomplishes its goals. For some ideological terrorists, of course, 
there are scarcely any clear goals that can be accomplished. But for 
many assassins and religious terrorists, there are important goals, 
such as ending tyranny, spreading a religious doctrine, or defeating 
a national enemy. 

By these standards, terrorism does not work. Franklin Ford concluded 
his long history of political murders by saying that, with one or 
two possible exceptions, assassinations have not produced results 
consonant with the aims of the doer. Walter Laqueur, in his shorter 
review of the matter, comes to the same conclusion: of the 50 prime 
ministers and heads of state killed between 1945 and 1985, it is 
hard to think of one whose death changed a state's policies.

Bernard Lewis argues that the original Assassins failed: they never 
succeeded in overthrowing the social order or replacing Sunnis with 
Shiites. The most recent study of suicide terrorism from 1983 
through 2001 found that, while it "has achieved modest or very 
limited goals, it has so far failed to compel target democracies to 
abandon goals central to national wealth or security."

One reason it does not work can be found in studies of Israeli 
public opinion. During 1979, there were 271 terrorist incidents in 
Israel and the territories it administers, resulting in the deaths 
of 23 people and the injuring of 344 more. Public-opinion surveys 
clearly showed that these attacks deeply worried Israelis, but their 
fear, instead of leading them to endorse efforts at reconciliation, 
produced a toughening of attitudes and a desire to see the 
perpetrators dealt with harshly. The current intifada has produced 
exactly the same result in Israel.

But if terrorism does not change the views of the victims and their 
friends, then it is possible that campaigns against terrorism will 
not change the views of people who support it. Many social 
scientists have come to just this conclusion.

In the 1970s, I attended meetings at a learned academy where people 
wondered what could be done to stop the terrorism of the German Red 
Army Faction and the Italian Red Brigades. The general conclusion 
was that no counterattacks would work. To cope with terrorism, my 
colleagues felt, one must deal with its root causes.

I was not convinced. My doubts stemmed, I suppose, from my own sense 
that dealing with the alleged root causes of crime would not work as 
well as simply arresting criminals. After all, we do not know much 
about the root causes, and most of the root causes we can identify 
cannot be changed in a free society—or possibly in any society.

The German and Italian authorities, faced with a grave political 
problem, decided not to change root causes but to arrest the 
terrorists. That, accompanied by the collapse of East Germany and 
its support for terrorists, worked. Within a few years the Red Army 
Faction and the Red Brigades were extinct. In the United States, the 
Weather Underground died after its leaders were arrested. 

But Islamic terrorism poses a much more difficult challenge. These 
terrorists live and work among people sympathetic to their cause. 
Those arrested will be replaced; those killed will be honored. 
Opinion polls in many Islamic nations show great support for anti-
Israeli and anti-American terrorists. Terrorists live in a 
hospitable river. We may have to cope with the river.

The relentless vilification of Jews, Israel, and Zionism by much of 
the Muslim press and in many Muslim schools has produced a level of 
support for terrorism that vastly exceeds the backing that American 
or European terrorists ever enjoyed. Over 75 percent of all 
Palestinians support the current intifada and endorse the 2003 
bombing of Maxim, a restaurant in Haifa. With suicide bombers 
regarded as martyrs, the number of new recruits has apparently 
increased. The river of support for anti-Israel terror is much wider 
and deeper than what the Baader-Meinhof gang received.

Imagine what it would have been like to eliminate the Baader-Meinhof 
gang if most West Germans believed that democracy was evil and that 
Marxism was the wave of the future, if the Soviet Union paid a large 
sum to the family of every killed or captured gang member, if West 
German students attended schools that taught the evils of democracy 
and regarded terrorists as heroes, if several West German states 
were governed by the equivalent of al Fatah, and if there were a 
German version of Gaza, housing thousands of angry Germans who 
believed they had a right of return to some homeland.

But support for resistance is not the same as support for an endless 
war. An opinion survey done in November 2002 by the Palestinian 
Center for Policy and Survey Research showed that over three-fourths 
of the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank supported a mutual 
cessation of violence between Israel and Palestinians and backed 
reconciliation between Israelis and a newly created Palestinian 
state. A majority favored the Palestinian Authority taking measures 
to prevent armed attacks against Israeli civilians. Another poll 
found that about half of all Palestinians wanted both the intifada 
and negotiations with Israel to go forward simultaneously, while 15 
percent favored negotiations alone.

These facts, rarely mentioned in the American press, suggest how 
empty are the statements of many Middle Eastern and European 
leaders, who incessantly tell us that ending terrorism generally 
requires "solving" the Palestinian question by dealing with Arafat. 
These claims, often made to satisfy internal political needs, fail 
to recognize how disliked Arafat is by his own people and how eager 
they are for a democratic government that respects the governed and 
avoids corruption.

Matters are worse when one state sponsors or accommodates terrorism 
in another state. In this case, the problem is to end that state 
support. To do that means making clear that the leaders of such a 
state will suffer serious pain as a consequence of that 
accommodation. Though many people take exception to it, I think 
President Bush was right to condemn certain nations as being part of 
an "axis of evil," putting leaders on notice that they cannot fund 
or encourage Hamas, al-Qaida, or Hezbollah without paying a heavy 
price for it. Iraq has learned how high that price can be.

The Israeli government is trying to impose a high price on the 
Palestinian Authority because of its tolerance of and support for 
terrorist acts in Israel. It is too early to tell whether this 
effort will succeed. Arrests or deterrence, after all, cannot 
readily prevent suicide bombings, though good intelligence can 
reduce them, and seizing leaders can perhaps hamper them. The 
presence of the Israeli Defense Forces in Palestinian areas almost 
surely explains the recent reduction in suicide attacks, but no such 
presence, costly as it is, can reduce the number to zero. As 
Palestinian hostility toward Israel grows, reinforced by what is 
taught in Palestinian schools, recruiting suicide bombers becomes 
much easier.

The larger question, of course, is whether ending terrorism requires 
a new political arrangement. Ideally, the Palestinian people must 
grant Israel the right to a secure existence in exchange for being 
given their own country. There may be popular support among both 
Israelis and Palestinians for such an arrangement, but it is not 
obvious that political leaders of either side can endorse such a 
strategy. As the level of terrorism and state action grows, the 
opportunities for dialogue diminish, and public confidence that any 
new dialogue will produce meaningful results declines. No one has 
yet found a way to manage this difficulty.







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